Spaces are now conserved when they surround current cursor. Examples:
abc | def
becomes
abc | def
after DEPM and
abc |
is kept as it is.
Fixes ticket #11412.
We fill up edited insets into cache when editing inset is triggered, but
this cache is never cleared up for dialogs unassociated with some inset
- thus when e.g. graphics dialog is open for completely new image the
old cache is (wrongly) used.
https://www.mail-archive.com/lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org/msg207192.html
https://marc.info/?l=lyx-devel&m=154458979925296&w=2
This is related to the fix for #9158 and the caching of bibfile
information. On Windows, it is incredibly slow to run kpsewhich,
which we do to check where files actually are, so as to get info
about them (e.g., timestamps). So we have started to cache that
as a map. The map is supposed to be invalidated when various
things happen, but an oversight was causing it to be invalidated
on every cut operation. This is because cutting uses a temporary
Buffer, and the operations on it were affecting the *global* cache
of biblio file info. (It makes sense to have a global cache, since
these files are not document-specific.) Basically, we have to update
the list of bibfiles in that temporary Buffer---but that is one of
the things that invalidated the cache. The solution is only to
invalidate the cache if the list of bibfiles has actually changed
(a sensible idea anyway). The only time that will happen in the
temporary Buffer is when the copied information contains a BibTeX
inset. That should be fairly rare.
The backslash is the escape character used in our parser. Hence,
when used as a path separator on Windows, it has to be itself
escaped or the path enclosed in either double or single quotes.
Windows users are maybe trained to quote paths containing spaces
but not paths with backslashes. So, we automatically escape the
backslashes when they are not already enclosed in quotes.
Previously the permission were destroyed by the newly created
temporary file -- which is later used as new saved file.
Tested on symlinks as well but only on Linux.